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AI startup Thinking Machines clinches capital and a major chip supply deal from Nvidia

ai startup thinking machines nvidia

AI startup Thinking Machines clinches capital and a major chip supply deal from Nvidia

March 10 (Reuters) – AI startup Thinking Machines Lab said on Tuesday it has struck a multi-year partnership with Nvidia (NVDA.O), that will see it receive a ​significant investment and procure at least one gigawatt of the chipmaker’s ‌next-generation processors.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Under the agreement, Thinking Machines – founded last year by former OpenAI Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati – will deploy Nvidia’s upcoming Vera ​Rubin systems starting early next year. The computing power will primarily be ​used to train the startup’s artificial intelligence models.

Industry executives have said ⁠1 gigawatt of computing power, enough to power roughly 750,000 U.S. homes, ​can cost around $50 billion.

The deal will help Thinking Machines compete with larger rivals ​in building powerful AI systems, and underscores the industry’s eagerness to scale computing capacity.

Thinking Machines quickly became one of Silicon Valley’s most closely watched AI startups after raising about $2 billion in ​a seed funding round led by Andreessen Horowitz that valued the company at $12 ​billion. Nvidia was also an investor in the round.

The startup has recently been seeking to ‌raise ⁠more in a new funding round that could value it at tens of billions of dollars, sources told Reuters earlier.

The company has recently seen several departures, including co-founder and former Chief Technology Officer Barret Zoph and co-founder Luke Metz, ​who both returned to ​their former employer ⁠OpenAI amid fierce competition for AI talent.

The partnership also highlights Nvidia’s growing role as a financier of the startups ​that rely on its AI chips.

It has made a recent$30 ​billion investment ⁠in OpenAI and invested $10 billion in Anthropic, while also supplying the graphics processing units (GPUs) used to train and run their models, a dynamic that some industry analysts ⁠say ​creates a circular flow of capital and computing ​resources. That in turn has given rise to comparisons with the late 1990s tech bubble.

Reporting by Krystal ​Hu in San Francisco; Additional reporting by Deepa Seetharaman; Editing by Edwina Gibbs

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AI startup Thinking Machines clinches capital and a major chip supply deal from Nvidia, source

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